The Rosie the Riveter photo was snapped when Fraley was a factory worker at California's Alameda Naval Station. She was one of millions of women who filled the workforce during World War II.

Her daughter-in-law, Marnie Blankenship, said a photographer just happened to take her picture, which was originally used to deglamorize women and show them in proper workplace attire.

More than 60 years later, while Fraley was at a convention for women who worked during the war, she saw the photograph of her all those years ago, promoted as Rosie the Riveter in the "We can do it" poster.

At the time, a woman named Geraldine Hoff Doyle was credited as the one in the photograph but in 2015 the original photograph was found with the caption naming the woman as Naomi Parker.